To be fair, Trump has had a packed itinerary. Besides the bilateral trade talks that took place Friday morning, the U.K. prime minister, Theresa May, had organized a range of activities that centered on the president’s British hero, World War II British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

On Thursday evening, she held a black tie dinner for him at the 2,000 acre Blenheim Palace estate in Oxfordshire—Churchill’s birth and burial place. There, coincidentally, the Duke of Marlborough had set up an exhibition on Churchill, which the prime minister was keen to show Trump. In fact, U.K. press reported that the president was so fascinated by the exhibit that he delayed dinner for his 150 guests.

Before it was abruptly cut from the final itinerary, there had also been talk that Trump might even get to visit Churchill’s war room.

Knowing that the president idolizes the wartime leader, some have suggested that the British have crafted the entire visit to rub Trump’s ego ahead of the all-important trade talks.

So, on Friday, when White House press secretary Sarah Sanders shared a picture of Trump proudly sitting on the armchair formerly owned by the wartime leader, he, once again, broke the internet.

As flawed a character as Churchill undoubtedly was, the idea of El Presidente Naranja sitting in his chair is profoundly distasteful. Churchill served his country as a soldier and led it through an existential conflict to victory.

What did Trump muse to himself while sitting in Winston Churchill's chair? Churchill spoke to House of Commons as PM for first time on 13 May 1940 w/ unforgettable: "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat." pic.twitter.com/bjBZJ8aLTO

The trade deal’s fate, though, really hangs on the fragility and temperamental nature of Trump’s mood and, if he looks out his hotel window at the mass protests and demonstrations happening in London, it might well be called off once again.